Browsing Hood River County, Oregon Planning Documents by Title

Hood River County (Or.); Mackwell, Peter(Hood River County (Or.), 2006)

[more]

[less]

Abstract:

The Hood River County Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP) identifies and
assesses wildfire hazards within the county boundaries and shows other hazards that are
contiguous to the county. The City of Cascade Locks has already completed a CWPP
which will be included in this County-wide plan. [From the Plan]

Description:

123 pp. Includes maps and figures. Published 2006. Captured January 29. 2007.

Files in this item: 1

The Hood River County Comprehensive land Use Plan is the basic instrument used for County land use planning. It is law and is utilized to control and direct the use and development of land use activities on private lands within the County. [From the Plan]

Description:

24 pp. Bookmarks supplied by UO. Includes maps. Adopted February 21, 1984. Received from Hood River County October, 2006.

Files in this item: 1

Hood River County (Or.); Mid-Columbia Economic Development District(Mid-Columbia Economic Development District, April , 2007)

[more]

[less]

Abstract:

This document is a coordinated transportation plan focused on addressing the transportation needs of low income individuals, individuals with disabilities, and seniors residing in Hood River County. [From the Plan]

Files in this item: 1

Hood River County (Or.); Mid-Columbia Economic Development District(Mid-Columbia Economic Development District, 2009)

[more]

[less]

Abstract:

This document is an update to the 2007-2010 Hood River County Coordinated Transportation Plan.
Mid-Columbia Economic Development District, under contract with the Association of Oregon
Counties prepared this plan update. It was updated using information collected from the previous
coordinated transportation plan, data from new surveys and outreach efforts, and new demographic
and service resource analysis. [From the Plan]

Files in this item: 1

Development codes are ordinances implementing a local government’s comprehensive plan. They include two components: a zoning ordinance and a subdivision ordinance, which may be adopted and published as separate documents under their own titles. In some cases the sections pertaining to subdivision of land may be included in the zoning ordinance.

Files in this item: 1

Hood River County (Or.); Cogan Owens Cogan (Firm)(Hood River County (Or.), September 18, 2006)

[more]

[less]

Abstract:

The state Unincorporated Communities Rule (OAR 660-022) requires counties to adopt land
use and zoning measures specific to unincorporated communities in order to ensure that
cumulative development in the communities will not:
• Result in public health hazards or adverse environmental impacts that violate state or
federal water quality regulations, or
• Exceed the carrying capacity of the soil or of existing water supply resources and sewer
services.
[From the Plan]

The plan includes resources and
information that will assist County agencies, residents, public and private sector
organizations, and other people interested in participating in hazard mitigation.
(Natural hazard mitigation involves permanently reducing or alleviating the losses of
life, property, and injuries resulting from natural hazards through long and short-term
strategies). The plan contains:
8 Goals to direct the County vision for a disaster resilient community;
50 Recommended actions for mitigation activities;
A summarized county hazard risk assessment with detailed annex;
Plan implementation and maintenance procedures;
Documentation of County, regional, State, and Federal resources. [From the Plan]

Description:

236 pp. Includes maps. Published August 2006. Captured October 16, 2006.

The Plan thoroughly describes current recreational facilities in the Parks District and provides a range of analysis that estimate the future needs of the Parks District; presents Parks District priorities so that adequate open space and public recreation facilities in the City and County will be provided...aims to facilitate a broad range of innovative â Best in Classâ recreational facilities that are uniquely tailored to the interests of our community by presenting materials that can be used by a wide range of local government and citizen groups to plan and implement future facilities; provides guidance materials for community members who spearhead efforts for development of new facilities; provide data, priority inputs, and conceptual implementation plans that can be used by the Parks District, the City and County planning in their ongoing planning decisions. [From the Plan]

Files in this item: 1

Hood River County (Or.); Cogan Owens Cogan (Firm); David Evans and Associates(Hood River County (Or.), July 21, 2003)

[more]

[less]

Abstract:

The TSP was developed through technical analysis combined with input and review by a project management team, a technical advisory committee, and the public. The plan was initially prepared in 1995-1997 and subsequently updated and adopted in 2002-2003. Key elements of the TSP include:
Plans and Studies (Chapter 1);
Community Involvement/Project Goals and Objectives (Chapter 2);
Current Conditions (Chapter 3);
Forecasts and Analysis (Chapter 4);
Transportation System Alternatives (Chapter 5);
Transportation System Plan (Chapter 6);
Capital Improvement Financing Plan (Chapter 7). [From the Plan]

Description:

147 pp. Includes maps. Adopted July 21, 2003. Received from ODOT January 2, 2007.

Files in this item: 1

The Hood River County Board of Commissioners adopted a Reasons Exception to Statewide Planning Goal 3, Comprehensive Plan Amendment from Exclusive Farm Use to Rural Residential, and Zone Change from EFU to RR10 in order to facilitate the development of a church on property located within 3 miles of the Hood River Urban Growth Boundary.

Description:

244 pp. Adopted 2006-12-06. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment

Files in this item: 1

Amended the County zoning article regarding Planned Unit Developments within the UGA (Chapter 17.07) by adding objective density calculation criteria and making stylistic changes to match the City's zoning code. Also repealed zoning Article 52 - Bonus Density as it conflicted with other portions of the zoning ordinance and was terminally out of date.

Description:

21 pp. Adopted 2008-08-07. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment

Files in this item: 1

This plan and map amendment added the remainder of a parcel that was split zoned (approx. Half of the parcel was within the Health Hazard Overlay Zone and the other half was not) into the Health Hazard Overlay Zone. The Background Document was updated to document the change.

Description:

14 pp. Adopted 2008-12-30. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment

Files in this item: 1

A request made by David Logsdon for a Comprehensive Plan and Zone Change to convert the designation of his 10 acre from Primary Forest to Farm and to change its zoning from Primary Forest (F-2) to Exclusive Farm Use (EFU) - Non High Value Farmland.

Description:

43 pp. Adopted 2010-09-30. Department of Land Conservation and Development Notice of Adopted Amendment